“At this time there is no agreement to pass the governor’s bill,” said Scott Reif, a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos. “The conference will review the legislation, and discussions with the governor will continue.”

Throughout most of Monday night, it appeared an agreement on how to handle teacher evaluations — particularly whether to make public the names and rankings of individual educators — was all but lost.

Cuomo called a talk-radio show Monday evening to say he was content for the bill to wait for another day. He reiterated his position against fast-tracking the bill at the end of the legislative session this week, a once-common practice the governor has avoided.

But late Monday, just before the midnight deadline to introduce a bill, Cuomo’s office issued its legislation and word of a last-minute deal with teachers unions. The proposal would let parents view the evaluation records of teachers currently assigned to teach their children, but its online database would be scrubbed of teachers’ names.

At least one union leader hailed the announcement.

Randi Weingarten, head of the American Federation of Teachers and former president of New York City’s teachers union, said the bill would better protect teachers than New York City’s release of teacher-evaluation data earlier this year.

“The public shaming that happened to NYC teachers in Feb was terrible-bill creates a balance between confidentiality&parent’s rights,” she wrote on Twitter.

By mid-morning, however, Skelos’s office hadn’t announced plans to publicly discuss the Cuomo bill even as there appeared to be greater signs of traction in the Assembly.

“We will discuss it with members and we anticipate that we’ll pass the bill,” said Michael Whyland, a spokesman for Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, a Manhattan Democrat who has friendly relations with teachers unions.